To smear; to play the flatterer.
A viscous, sticky application; a spot smeared or daubed; a smear.
A picture coarsely executed.
Unfired clay, usually not mixed with temper, that was often used for the construction of wattle-and-daub structures.
A mixture of clay, soil, hair or hay, and animal droppings. Plastered onto a wattle wall in the construction of a building.
A mud of clay mixture applied over wattle to strengthen and seal it.
coat with plaster; "daub the wall"
cover (a surface) by smearing (a substance) over it; "smear the wall with paint"; "daub the ceiling with plaster"
Material made of mud, horsehair, clay, and animal dung mixed together. It was applied to houses, covering the wattle.
1. To cover or smear with sticky soft matter such as plaster. 2. To paint coarsely or unskillfully. 3. To cover a rough texture with adhesive material. 4. A spot of adhesive.
A paste used by cheats to secretly smear marks over the backs of playing cards; usually during the game.
a mixture of mud and straw used to plaster walls, usually applied to a wattle fence
Clay used to fill in the holes and gaps between the wood or thatching of a wall. It was used by both Indians and European settlers in North America to construct houses.
A mixture of clay, chalk and mud which covers wattle, to form a wall.
Mud and clay covering as in wattle and daub
To coat or plaster the inside of a cupola at the melting zone or the inside of a ladle with a refractory mixture.